Afghanistan: Karzai Talks Tough
Yohannan Chemarapally
THE
visit of the Afghan president,
Hamid Karzai, to India
in the second week of December came at a time when
negotiations with the
Americans on the future of their forces in his country
were poised at a
critical stage. Before Karzai landed in Delhi,
there were reports that the Obama administration had
asked India
to intervene on its behalf and persuade
President Karzai to put his signature to the Bilateral
Security Agreement (BSA)
on the presence of US troops in Afghanistan
after 2014.
FEAR OF CHAOS
& INSTABILITY
As
it is, India
as well as Pakistan,
China
and Russia,
all important players in the region, have
indicated that they were for a limited US
military presence in Afghanistan.
There is an unstated fear that a precipitate departure
of the American military
could lead to more instability and plunge the country
once again into chaos and
anarchy. Testifying before an US Senate Committee, James
Dobbins, the US
special envoy to Afghanistan
and Pakistan
(Af-Pak) had
expressed the hope that Karzai’s visit to India
would expedite the signing of
the agreement. Dobbins told the Senate members that
Karzai had “high respects
and good relations with the Indian government.” Dobbins
said that India
had enthusiastically supported the US role in Afghanistan
and had invested two
billion dollars in infrastructure projects in the
country.
Only
Iran
has formally stated its opposition to the
continued presence of the American military forces and
military bases in Afghanistan
after 2014. Iran
is already surrounded by big American military bases. It
is naturally not
comfortable with the idea of nine permanent military
bases the US
wants to retain in Afghanistan.
The BSA envisages an
initial stay of 10 years for 15,000 US and NATO troops
in Afghanistan.
The
American troops are supposed to be engaged in
“anti-terrorism” missions and the
training of Afghan troops. US intelligence agencies
estimate that there are at
the most 50 Al Qaeda fighters left in Afghanistan
which has led many
experts to question the rationale for the American
troops’ presence. All the
same, given the recent thaw in relations with Washington,
Teheran is not protesting too
loudly on the continued presence of US troops in their
immediate neighbourhood.
Iran
had testy relations
with Afghanistan,
when the
Taliban were in power in Kabul.
Teheran did not react negatively when the US
forces toppled the Taliban from
power in 2001. At the same time they do not want the
Americans to stay
indefinitely in the never ending war on terror.
Karzai
is trying his best
to avoid the ignominy of being the Afghan head of state
to formally give
permission for an indefinite of foreign forces in the
country. He would rather
prefer his successor to do the needful. The US
defence secretary, Chuck Hagel, who was on a visit to Kabul
in the first week of December told the media that he had
received assurances
that Afghanistan
would eventually sign the BSA. Hagel, however, indicated
that Karzai’s
intention of leaving the signing to his successor after
the general elections
in Afghanistan
in the first week of April next year was not a feasible
idea. Senior American
officials had suggested earlier that the signature to
the agreement should not
necessarily be that of the Afghan president.
COSTLIEST WAR IN
RECENT HISTORY
The
American media,
meanwhile, has been busy lampooning the Afghan president
for his alleged
opportunism and his ingratitude for the sacrifices US
and western forces have
made in Afghanistan.
According to economists like Joseph Stiglitz, the cost
of the Afghan war for
the US
has crossed the figure of 700 billion dollars. Only an
estimated three billion dollars
have been spent on developmental projects. The
Pentagon’s request for
operations in Afghanistan
for 2013 was for 85.5 billion dollars. The war in Afghanistan
has been described as
the costliest war in contemporary history.
In
Delhi, during his
interaction with the media, the Afghan president once
again made it clear that
the delay in appending his signature was mainly due to
the lack of a firm
commitment from Washington that Afghan lives and homes
would not be randomly
targeted, as was being done since the American military
occupation began at the
beginning of the last decade. “I have demanded an end to
all American attacks
against Afghan homes and the beginning of a realistic
peace process. Whenever
the Americans meet these two conditions, I am ready to
sign the agreement,”
Karzai told Radio Free Europe, before coming to Delhi.
The
BSA states that
American troops can raid Afghan homes only under
exceptional circumstances. Though
the Americans have been regularly promising to stop
targeting civilians and
respect the sanctity of Afghan homes, the attacks have
continued unabated. As
the Afghan president said in Delhi,
to kill one suspected Taliban fighter, the Americans
don’t think twice before
targeting a bus full of passengers. The Afghan president
pointed out that three
days after he received a personal assurance from
President Barack Obama that Afghan
homes will not be targeted, US forces bombed a home,
killing a two years old
boy and critically injuring his mother and other close
relatives. President
Karzai, according to reports, was particularly upset
with the torture and
killings of 12 civilians in Wardak province in early
2013, allegedly at the
hands of American troops. The Americans refused to
cooperate with Afghanistan’s
National
Directorate of Security to question the American
soldiers who were
said to be involved in the killings. The Wardak killings
have been described as
one of “the gravest war crimes” committed by American
troops since the invasion
of Afghanistan
in 2001.
After
Obama became president,
the US
forces have been relying increasingly on drone warfare
in the Af-Pak region.
Thousands of Afghans have perished in American drone
attacks. The Iraqi president,
Nuri al Malki, had firmly insisted that for the US
forces to continue staying on in Iraq
they will have to come under
Iraqi state jurisdiction. Washington
had refused to accede to this demand and had to give up
its plans for a long
term military presence in that country. The Afghan
government has not formally
made a similar demand that after 2014, American troops
will be answerable to
Afghan authorities for human rights violations and
related war crimes offences.
NO TRUST IN
AMERICANS
Karzai,
who will demit
office in the middle of 2014, has had a love hate
relation with the US in
recent
years. He has candidly admitted on many occasions on the
mutual lack of trust.
He has been repeatedly saying that the Americans “don’t
trust him and I don’t
trust the Americans.” Karzai said in Delhi
that the Indian government broadly agreed with his views
on the signing of the
BSA while emphasising that both the countries want the
American troops to stay on.
The Indian external affairs minister, Salman Khurshid,
told the media that the
Afghan president had the best interests of his country
in mind and “in
accordance with India’s
approach
to Afghanistan,
we will support it.” The Afghan president said that the
Indian prime minister
was in agreement with him “on the need for Afghan
conditionalities to be
fulfilled.”
Karzai
said that talking
with the Taliban is important for the sake of the Afghan
people. Not all
sections of the Taliban are amenable for talks with
Karzai or his
representatives. But the Afghan president seems to be
optimistic about the
prospects of drawing in the bulk of the Taliban into the
peace process. This is
better said than done. The Taliban will keep on staging
their bi-annual
offensives as long as there are foreign troops in their
homeland. Meaningful
talks, the Taliban in Afghanistan
have said, can only begin after all the foreign troops
leave the country.
Meanwhile,
despite the
looming uncertainties, Kabul
and New Delhi
seem intent on
further strengthening bilateral relations. Afghanistan
wanted India
to play a bigger role in the military and security
affairs of the country.
During the Karzai visit, India
agreed to increase the operational capabilities of the
Afghanistan National
Defence and Security Forces (ANSDF). President Karzai
said that he was very
satisfied with the response from the Indian side on his
request for military
training and equipment. India
from available indications, will not be complying with
the Afghan president’s
request for tanks and artillery. India
along with Russia
is planning
to upgrade an old armaments repair factory near Kabul.
The
Afghan president said
that his country aspired to have an army that would be
dependent on “its own
resources and its own citizens.” According to the Afghan
president, India
was helping Afghanistan
achieve this objective.
The two sides also agreed on a blueprint to enhance
trade ties by tying up with
Iran
to develop new routes
from the Iranian port of Chah-bahar. India has built a road
connecting Zaranj, which
is situated near the Iranian port, to the highway that
connects to all the
major cities of Afghanistan.
Indian goods can be easily and cheaply transported to
Chah-bahar and from there
onwards to Afghanistan
and Central Asia. India
is also expected to go ahead
and invest 11 billion dollars in the Hajigak iron ore
project. Afghanistan
has
vast untapped mineral deposits, including lithium, gold
and hydrocarbons estimated
to be worth around one trillion dollars; 1.4 million
tons of rare earth elements
vital to American industry are awaiting extraction. This
could be a major
factor for the American eagerness to retain a strong
military presence in Afghanistan.
There
are many Afghanistan
watchers who fear that a proxy war
between India
and Pakistan
could
erupt if the Americans pack up and leave the country, as
some senior American
administration officials are threatening. Islamabad
has been wary of the growing Indian clout in Kabul.
India
is the fifth largest aid donor to Afghanistan.
President Karzai has
been a frequent flyer to Delhi.
A return of the Taliban to power would be viewed in Delhi
as a victory for Islamabad.
There is already talk of the old alliance between India,
Iran
and Russia
in Afghanistan
resurfacing in the
event of Taliban resurgence.